The Market
Technical
The
indices (DJIA 13482, S&P 1445) turned in a mixed performance yesterday (Dow
down, S&P up) but both remained well within their primary trends: (1) short
term uptrends [13265-14035, 1420-1510] and (2) intermediate term uptrends
[12457-17457, 1314-1914]. Additional
resistance exists at 14170/1576 (October 2007 high) and support at 13302/1422
(April 2012 high---resistance now support).
Volume
fell, breadth was mixed. The VIX was
down but trades within the gap bordered by the upper boundary of its short term
downtrend and the lower boundary of its intermediate term trading range.
GLD
fell slightly but remains above the lower boundaries of its very short term and
short term uptrends and the intermediate term trading range. GLD appears to be consolidating after an
awfully nice run to the upside. Any
weakness and our Portfolios will add to their holdings.
Gold
and the debt ceiling (chart):
Bottom
line: the primary price trends remain
up. Investors appear unconcerned about
either my oft expressed fundamental concerns and/or the increasing technical
divergences that are occurring. That keeps me focused on the Sell side but
only to the extent the current euphoria carries our stocks into their Sell
Half Range . At Market extremes, this strategy can be
psychologically unsatisfactory in that our Portfolios are selling as stock
prices rise and, in the first instance, they leave some money on the
table.
That
said, I am not smart enough to call a Market top; and our Sell Discipline is
the most effective system that I have found to deal with the issues of
portfolio rebalancing, preservation of capital and stability of principal. Patience.
Market
peaks versus business cycles (short):
And
this (short):
Market
performance when incumbents win (short):
Fundamental
Headlines
It
was pretty dull reading for US economic data yesterday: weekly retail sales
were mixed though September vehicle sales were quite strong. However, Europe , specifically
Spain , was the
focus of investor attention.
Early
news was that Spain
was ready to ask for a bailout; that got stocks going to the upside as
investors assumed that Spain
would get the funds necessary to keep solvent.
But later in the day, PM Rajoy poo pooed the idea, saying he didn’t
expect to seek funds anything soon---and markets sold off. This is illustrative of an all too typical
pattern of eurocrat communications---nobody seems to know who’s on first. And that, of course, leads to an even worse
problem, i.e. investor and electorate uncertainty, which results in increased
volatility and social unrest.
The
aforementioned tomfoolery notwithstanding, the universe knows that Spain
is bankrupt and that the recent bank stress tests were no more ‘stressful’ than
in prior occurrences in which the EU elite swore the banks were solvent only to
have to back pedal later. What it
doesn’t know is how this all gets resolved and yesterday’s on again, off again
bailout comments didn’t help.
And
speaking of the bank stress test (medium and today’s must read):
As
I have said many times, as long as investors cut the euros some slack, they
(the euros) can continue to obfuscate and procrastinate. I am not smart enough to know when that door
slams shut; but when, as and if it does, in the absence of considerably more
broad based reforms than we have had to date, look out below.
Math
problems in the EU---E22 trillion is missing (medium):
Meanwhile
in Greece ,
missing Swiss bank account information is coming to light; and it may contain
the names of......drum roll..........politicians (medium):
Bottom
line: I said it as succinctly as I could yesterday: ‘at
this point, I have no feel for this Market.
I am at odds with the technicals.
I have lost my empathy with a Market where good news is good news one
day, but bad news the next and visa versa.
This isn’t the first time in my career that this has happened; and when
it has, I have found that the best thing to do in nothing---which is what I am
doing.’
David
Rosenberg on when to get positive on stocks (short):
Valuation
and election year rallies (short):
CEO
expectations plunge (short):
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